Abstract

Current pertussis vaccines protect against disease, but not against colonization by and transmission of Bordetella pertussis, whereas natural infection protects against both. The live attenuated vaccine BPZE1 was developed to mimic immunogenicity of natural infection without causing disease, and in preclinical models protected against pertussis disease and B. pertussis colonization after a single nasal administration. Phase 1 clinical studies showed that BPZE1 is safe and immunogenic in humans when administered as a liquid formulation, stored at ≤−70 °C. Although BPZE1 is stable for two years at ≤−70 °C, a lyophilized formulation stored at ≥5 °C is required for commercialization. The development of a BPZE1 drug product, filled and lyophilized directly in vials, showed that post-lyophilization survival of BPZE1 depended on the time of harvest, the lyophilization buffer, the time between harvest and lyophilization, as well as the lyophilization cycle. The animal component-free process, well defined in terms of harvest, processing and lyophilization, resulted in approximately 20% survival post-lyophilization. The resulting lyophilized drug product was stable for at least two years at −20 °C ± 10 °C, 5 °C ± 3 °C and 22.5 °C ± 2.5 °C and maintained its vaccine potency, as evaluated in a murine protection assay. This manufacturing process thus enables further clinical and commercial development of BPZE1.

Highlights

  • Pertussis or whooping cough is a highly contagious respiratory disease that can be fatal, especially in young infants [1]

  • The development work mostly focused on determining the culture conditions and lyophilization buffer composition that resulted in a homogenous drug substance suspension and maximal survival after lyophilization

  • B. pertussis produces a number of virulence factors that enable binding to epithelial cells as well as to each other, and is capable of biofilm formation

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Summary

Introduction

Pertussis or whooping cough is a highly contagious respiratory disease that can be fatal, especially in young infants [1]. It affects adolescents and adults [2]. Prior infection by B. pertussis prevents secondary infections and induces long-lasting, not life-long immunity [7]. Based on these observations, a vaccination strategy to mimic the immunogenicity of natural infection without causing disease was developed by using the live attenuated nasal pertussis vaccine BPZE1.

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